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Thursday, 31 January 2013

WE HAVE A SECRET LAIR.

It's been an exciting couple of weeks for me, as the lead on the Capital
Geek Girls fanclub. (If you don't know what I'm talking about, check
out the post announcing the formation of the club.) Tons of great geeky
girls (and guys) have joined the Facebook fanpage, and I'm receiving
tons of leads on great events happening around the city that are geek
girl-friendly. There's a lot of support for the geeky girl movement, and
it's time to take it to the next level.

It's time for a headquarters.

A batcave.

A fortress of solitude.

A Stark Tower.

An Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters.

THE COMIC BOOK SHOPPE: OUR NEW HQ

Negotiations
wrapped up this week (negotiations = sandwiches and the rolling of some
20-sided dice) with the Comic Book Shoppe on Bank Street. The Shoppe
has been a forerunner in girl-friendliness for a long time...I know
this, as a patron now for about a decade...and since it was their
special Ladies' Night event that got me excited about this whole 'sexism
in Geektopia' thing anyway, it seems like a natural fit for the club.
With the Shoppe on Bank Street as our headquarters, Capital Geek Girls
will be able to start hosting events and providing a geographical beacon
for geek girldom in the city.

There
are talks of hosting another Ladies' Night this spring, and even
ramping up the girl-friendly gaming nights that already occur at the
Shoppe. Whenever an event is held in a particularly geek girl-friendly
fashion down there, we'll be spreading the news and making it known.

This
super-cool headquarters will provide us with a base of operations from
which to take over the world. There are a lot of conventions and events
coming up in the Ottawa (and Montreal and Toronto) area; with a
headquarters, we can spread our geek girl power far and wide.

If
you have any ideas of things you'd like to see Capital Geek Girls
hosting, comment below or email me. And keep following the Facebook fanpage, where we keep you up to date on fangirl news and happenings!

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Monday, 28 January 2013

PAINTING THE EASY WAY:
A DIY WORK OF ART

I’ve been painting for
years, and I absolutely love it. I used to do a lot of commissions and art
shows, but recent years has seen me focused more on craft and writing. But with
my bedroom makeover slowly coming along, I realized I needed a big painting to
start tying the space together. I hate buying art at a department-type store
because I’d always rather do something
myself; but I know that both these options can seem intimidating to people who
don’t fancy themselves as artists. Well, perhaps this tutorial will make the
process of creating a painting a bit less daunting.

THINKING ABOUT A PAINTING

A good painting is
always at least 50% about planning. Painting is (generally speaking) about
layering, and layering needs to be done in a logical order or you end up with a
mess. Think about getting dressed in the morning: if you put your jeans on
first, then your underwear, you’d
probably deem that an outfit fail. The same concept applies to paintings.

Inexpensive craft acrylics like these are
quite useful.

WHAT YOU WILL NEED:

-Acrylic paint—any type is fine. I used a mix here of the
little craft bottles, and some student-quality thicker acrylics that come in metallic
‘toothpaste tubes’.

-Textured things that are okay to ruin—I used a piece of cardboard box, a sheet of
weird pressed hay meant for scrapbooking, and a couple of round caps off of some
old cosmetics.

-A canvas or wood canvas—I painted this one onto a wooden canvas,
which I’d primed a while ago. A stretched canvas, sold at your local art store,
is also a great option. If you want to leave it unframed, go with the ‘gallery
style’, which has a deeper built-in frame and looks better.

-Paintbrushes—some big, some small. I like soft bristles for a
smoother look but it depends on what you’re painting. A rough, rustic look may
work for you. Be sure to have lots of fresh water to clean your brushes and
keep them wet if you haven’t cleaned them.

Start with the background.

The background will
likely show through in a lot of spots, even if you paint a whole bunch of stuff
on it. It will certainly set the tone in terms of colour and texture. For this
painting, I worked in long, vertical streaks of red, warm yellow, and gold. I
went a bit crazy purchasing little tubes of gold paint in different tones, and
it was worth it because the look is very neat.

TIP FOR BEGINNERS:
MIXING COLOURS

Remember your colourwheel. If you want a painting to give off a harmonious vibe, keep your colour
choices within the same ¼ of the wheel. If you want to add some energy or
purposeful dischord, you can choose colours from other sectors of the wheel to
add in. Read about complementary colours for more help here. For this painting,
I stuck with red and yellow, and added some white to make things a bit pinky.
So it’s a harmonious set of colours.

Make a lot of streaks.

For this type of
painting, we want to blend the colours together, but not too much. You’ll see
big streaks of gold and yellow all through my piece. Everything on the
background layer is very smooth, though: you can use acrylics to be textured
and 3D, but with the background you probably don’t want a lot of texture yet
because it will interfere with the next step…

Paint something contrasting.

I looked up some lotus
images and freehanded these onto the canvas…because I have a lot of practice. I don’t recommend you freehand something
like a flower onto your painting if you don’t have practice under your belt.
Once your background is dry (anywhere from 20-60 minutes), you can use a piece
of chalk or even a light-coloured pencil crayon to draw your design onto the
canvas. Or better yet, use a stencil or a projector. Projectors are a great way
to ‘cheat’ in art—and trust me, art is all about cheating.

Once you get your
chalk or pencil crayon onto the canvas, choose a contrasting colour to paint
your design on. If you want to do your flowers (or whatever you drew) in a
colour that is lighter than the background, do them in white first, let them
dry, and then paint over top of the white. It’ll work like primer. Remember
that paint isn’t perfectly opaque, so using white as a primer is often a good
idea. For this painting, though, white was the actual colour I wanted. Still,
it took three layers of white to really make it opaque.

Add your texture.

I wanted gold paint
textured right over top of the lotuses and everything else, so this is when I
started adding texture.A piece of cardboard box, with the first layer pulled off, provided a great ridged stamping tool.

Cardboard texture...I painted thickly
right onto the cardboard, then
squished it onto the painting.

The result of the cardboard texture.

The weird pressed-hay
paper I found in the scrapbooking aisle made a squiggly mess that I quite
liked.

The strange pressed-straw sheet
I found. Again, I painted a bunch
of paint right onto the straw,
then pressed it into the painting.

The end result of the straw texture.

And I even grabbed a
couple of actual stamps I own for cardmaking, and dipped those into my thickest
paint and got some pretty good impressions on the canvas with those.

Paint the sides.

Painting the sides of
the canvas (the edge of the frame, basically) makes it look much better if you
hang it unframed. I painted the sides gold on mine. You can also just continue
the background colours right over the sides, though.

Varnish?

If you want to be sure
your piece is protected, wait three days and then use a water-based
varathane/polyurethane to seal the piece. It’s not mandatory with acrylic
paints, but you may like the look of it.

When you mess up:

Don’t worry about it.
Let the mistake dry, then paint over top of it. Be creative and don’t fear
mistakes! That fear will only hold you back. If you mess up really badly, you can let it dry, sand
it down a bit, and prime the whole thing over again. Heck, I don’t even usually
bother with sanding it.

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Friday, 25 January 2013

OTTAWA QUAD SESSIONS: ROLLER SKATES ARE BACK!

What has eight wheels, knee socks, and super-sore quads? Me,
once a week, when I skate at the Ottawa Quad Session skate night.

Watch the interview with Ottawa Quad Session!Kisses and hugs to Rob Dupuis, our cameraman and videographer.

Ottawa Quad Session is a new all-welcome roller skate night,
put together by Carleton U professor Pascal Gin. Pascal fell in love with
roller skating as a kid in the 80s, but rediscovered his love of old-school
quad skates when he recently attended a roller disco party. Determined to find
indoor space to enjoy this great hobby/sport, he started booking time at Norm
Fenn gym right on Carleton U campus, and invited people to skate for a low
cover charge. He started the skate nights in November, and has already gone
from four attendees to twenty-five.

The appeal of roller skates is hard to explain. They’re slower
and less maneuverable than the modern inline skates, and they’re nothing like
ice skates at all; but there’s something wonderful about the way they roll, the
way you can play on them, and the way people grin like idiots when they try
them out. As a retired derby girl, I already had the roller ‘bug’, but I’ve
been waiting for a non-derby place to use my skates through the winter months—and
even the rainy summer days. I was thrilled when I heard about Pascal’s quad
sessions and couldn’t wait to check ‘em out.

The venue isn’t what you’ll remember, if you happen to be
familiar with the traditional roller discos; they’re aren’t any disco lights
(yet) and the music isn’t blasting. But in some ways, this is great for newbies
who may be nervous of trying quads, and it’s good too for the derby girls who
do show up and run some casual drills. There’s a great mix of first-timers and
old-timers, and the vibe is very welcoming.

I’ll let the video speak for itself. You’ll see lots of guys
and girls skating around in the background, just enjoying the track or trying
out some fancy footwork. Over time, I suspect we’ll see more skate dancing and
trick-skaters coming out of the woodwork, especially with a roller skate shop
right here in town, finally.

And I mean what I say: if you come out for a skate night and
I’m there (which I try to be most nights), say hello! If you’re new, I’ll make
sure you know a couple good stops and anything else you may wanna learn. I used to coach, and I love helping skaters get started. If you’re
not-so-new, I’m always happy to talk skating just for fun.

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Wednesday, 23 January 2013

Music means a lot to
me. It has gotten me through tough times, and it’s augmented the good times. So
often, I find music knows just what to say, when words fail me…and even though
I love to write, they fail me a lot.

And sometimes, I just
like to make unusual playlists. I think the art of the playlist—formerly, the
art of the mixed tape—is something we’re losing in this day and age of ‘shuffle’
buttons on mp3 players and endless satellite radio station playback. Nowadays,
a playlist has to have something special about it to make it worth the trouble.
Well, here’s one of my newest creations:

THE CLAP-CLAP…CLAP PLAYLIST

It’s a common rhythm
in music, found in many eras. Two close-together claps, a pause, then another
clap. You can hear it in many songs. I’ve been slowly compiling a list of songs
that have this popular beat. I encourage you to head over to iTunes and
download these babies…the songs all tend to have a bouncy, upbeat feel, which
is perfect for this miserable cold winter weather. Or, you can listen to the
songs each on Youtube first…or, you
can head over to my Grooveshark
and just play the playlist right through. Here are the songs I’ve got so far; I
heartily encourage you to send more my way if you find them.

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Wednesday, 16 January 2013

I have a condition
called endometriosis, which means I have a very painful cycle. There’s a lot of
theories on how endometriosis works, but here’s the real story.

Instead of a uterus, I
have a badger.

I figure what happened
is that, when God was making me, it was a Friday afternoon and he was tired and
off his game, and instead of grabbing a uterus from the uterus box, he grabbed
a badger from the badger box.

(Usually I hypothesize
that God is a woman, but no woman would have a. made that mistake, and b.
failed to rectify it.)

The badger, which
we’ll call Wocky (short for Jabberwocky, which is probably the more accurate
description) lies dormant, hibernating, for most of the month.

Mid-month,
however, he reaches one long, clawed arm up towards one ovary or the other and
squeezes with his scratchy talons. That’s always fun.

A few days before the
end of my cycle, Wocky starts to wake up. And Wocky is ravenous. Wocky wants
chocolate…and salt. And chocolate salt. And salt on top of his chocolate salt.
And then fat. Wocky has wired puppet strings to my brain that allow him to
override my self-control, and I will find myself standing in the kitchen at 2am
with a half-eaten box of baker’s chocolate and an empty jar of olive tapenade.

He also has control
over my anger reflex. When people are rude or stupid, he gets rrrreally mad,
and where I might usually try to be tactful or avoid a fight, Wocky gets right
in there and works me like a Rock’em Sock’em Robot. (Which sometimes, I gotta
admit, is a bit of a joyful release, after how many times in a day I usually
bite my tongue.)

At the end of my
cycle, Wocky loses his mind and starts clawing at my insides. For 4-7 days, it
is literally as if an angry, rabid badger is biting, clawing, and gnawing on my
abdomen, my lower back, and all my internal organs. I get dizzy and sick, and
nauseated, and weak, and I could sleep for days. Probably because those
internal organs are kind of essential and best left unchewed.

When you try to talk
to me during Wocky’s week, I can barely hear you over the constant snarling and
badger ravaging that’s happening in my belly. When you ask me why I haven’t
walked to the corner store, it seems impossible to explain how angry Wocky will
be with the motion and how he will pull on nerve endings that make even my knees
ache. If I'm weepy, it's from experiencing endless days and nights of indescribable pain. When you look at me funny for eating crackers with pickled eggplant and
Dijon mustard, you clearly do not understand that I am desperately attempting
to assuage a very angry, vengeful woodland monster.

And if you’re one of
those lucky women who was given a proper uterus at birth, and you’ve never
experienced a badger in your belly, I just want you to know that I may love you,
but I also hate you.